Updike's This I Believe...

All Things Considered, April 18, 2005 · A person believes various things at various times, even on the same day. At the age of 73, I seem most instinctively to believe in the human value of creative writing, whether in the form of verse or fiction, as a mode of truth-telling, self-expression and homage to the twin miracles of creation and consciousness. The special value of these indirect methods of communication — as opposed to the value of factual reporting and analysis — is one of precision. Oddly enough, the story or poem brings us closer to the actual texture and intricacy of experience.

In fiction, imaginary people become realer to us than any named celebrity glimpsed in a series of rumored events, whose causes and subtler ramifications must remain in the dark. An invented figure like Anna Karenina or Emma Bovary emerges fully into the light of understanding, which brings with it identification, sympathy and pity. I find in my own writing that only fiction — and rarely, a poem — fully tests me to the kind of limits of what I know and what I feel. In composing even such a frank and simple account as this profession of belief, I must fight against the sensation that I am simplifying and exploiting my own voice.

I also believe, instinctively, if not very cogently, in the American political experiment, which I take to be, at bottom, a matter of trusting the citizens to know their own minds and best interests. "To govern with the consent of the governed": this spells the ideal. And though the implementation will inevitably be approximate and debatable, and though totalitarianism or technocratic government can obtain some swift successes, in the end, only a democracy can enlist a people's energies on a sustained and renewable basis. To guarantee the individual maximum freedom within a social frame of minimal laws ensures — if not happiness — its hopeful pursuit.

Cosmically, I seem to be of two minds. The power of materialist science to explain everything — from the behavior of the galaxies to that of molecules, atoms and their sub-microscopic components — seems to be inarguable and the principal glory of the modern mind. On the other hand, the reality of subjective sensations, desires and — may we even say — illusions, composes the basic substance of our existence, and religion alone, in its many forms, attempts to address, organize and placate these. I believe, then, that religious faith will continue to be an essential part of being human, as it has been for me.
- John Updike

World Map of Religions...

This can make you feel really small.

"[Abortion] Has Sown Violence..."

“America needs no words from me to see how your decision in Roe v. Wade has deformed a great nation. The so-called right to abortion has pitted mothers against their children and women against men. It has sown violence and discord at the heart of the most intimate human relationships. It has aggravated the derogation of the father’s role in an increasingly fatherless society. It has portrayed the greatest of gifts—a child—as a competitor, an intrusion, and an inconvenience. It has nominally accorded mothers unfettered dominion over the independent lives of their physically dependent sons and daughters.”
- Mother Teresa, found here.

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“The Future is More Beautiful..."

“The future is more beautiful than all the pasts.”
- Teilhard de Chardin (Letter, 5 September 1919, Making of a Mind, p.306)

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The Hare that Speaks...

I look out of the window, the leaves
are cold and still as they lay on the ground
and there, in the middle my view,
is something that blends in
with its surrounding yet does not
at the same time. I walk out
to that place and am awakened
by the corpse of a hare.

Death surrounds my feet as I kneel down
to inspect my fellow creature: there is
no blood, no breath, no sign of life,
and there is no head.
All that remains is the body,
a bruised memory of a life once lived
that is now returning what was given to it.

This creature will not rise like the phoenix,
to soar over the ashes of what it had made
burning a new image into the gray, cloudless sky.
Rather the hare with no head
will lie here and speak to me.
It will tell me the reality of life,
and tell me to return home
quickly.

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"i thank You God..."

i thank You God for most this amazing
day:for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky;and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes

(i who have died am alive again today,
and this is the sun's birthday;this is the birth
day of life and love and wings:and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)

how should tasting touching hearing seeing
breathing any-lifted from the no
of all nothing-human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?

(now the ears of my ears awake and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)
- E.E. Cummings

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The Soil of Home is Deep...

"It is best to love first what you are fitted to love, I suppose; you must start somewhere and have some roots, and the soil of [home] is deep."
- J.R.R. Tolkein, through Sam in The Return of the King, Houghton Mifflin (March 1988), p. 144.

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